The Burgomaster's Wife — Volume 05 eBook

“You haven’t yet looked want in the face,
Junker. This bread is a remedy for the most
terrible disease.” At the Hohenort Gate
Georg ordered Captain von Warmond to be waked, and
introduced Nicolas to him as a future Beggar.
The captain congratulated the boy and offered him
money to supply himself in Delft with whatever he
needed, and defray his expenses during the first few
weeks; but Nicolas rejected his wealthy friend’s
offer, for a purse filled with gold coins hung at his
girdle. A jeweller in the Hague had given them
to him yesterday in payment for Fraulein Van Hoogstraten’s
emerald ring.

Nicolas showed the captain his treasure, and then
exclaimed:

“Now forward, Junker von Dornburg, I know where
we shall find them; and you, Captain Van Duivenvoorde,
tell the burgomaster and Janus Dousa what has become
of me.”

CHAPTER XXXII.

A week had elapsed since Henrica’s flight, and
with it a series of days of severe privation.
Maria knew from the musician, that young Matanesse
had accompanied Georg, and that the latter was on his
way to the Beggars. This was the right plan.
The bubbling brook belonged to the wild, rushing,
mighty river. She wished him happiness, life
and pleasure; but —­strange—­since
the hour that she tore his verses, the remembrance
of him had receded as far as in the day: before
the approach of the Spaniards. Nay, after her
hard-won conquest of herself and his departure, a
rare sense of happiness, amid all her cares and troubles,
had taken possession of the young wife’s heart.
She had been cruel to herself, and the inner light
of the clear diamond first gleams forth with the right
brilliancy, after it has endured the torture of polishing.
She now felt with joyous gratitude, that she could
look Peter frankly in the eye, grant him love, and
ask love in return. He scarcely seemed to notice
her and her management under the burden of his cares,
but she felt, that many things she said and could
do for him pleased him. The young wife did not
suffer specially from the long famine, while it caused
Barbara pain and unstrung her vigorous frame.
Amid so much suffering, she often sunk into despair
before the cold hearth and empty pots, and no longer
thought it worth while to plait her large cap and ruffs.
It was now Maria’s turn to speak words of comfort,
and remind her of her son, the Beggar captain, who
would soon enter Leyden.

On the sixth of September the burgomaster’s
wife was returning home from an early walk.
Autumn mists darkened the air, and the sea-breeze drove
a fine, drizzling spray through the streets.
The dripping trees had long since been robbed of
their leaves, not by wind and storm, but by children
and adults, who had carried the caterpillars’
food to their kitchens as precious vegetables.

At the Schagensteg Maria saw Adrian, and overtook
him. The boy was sauntering idly along, counting
aloud. The burgomaster’s wife called to
him, and asked why he was not at school and what he
was doing there.